Hello, and welcome all, to the World of Darkne-
...Aaaaand it's gone.
This story...
...Aaaaand it's gone.
This story...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
User | Total |
---|---|
Critian Caceorte | 1 |
Sacred Gears are not magical artifacts. They are part of the system of miracles of the Biblical god.
Ah, thank you for providing some clarification. I've been rereading DxD in order to prepare for this story, though it seems that in my haste to publish I have gotten a few details wrong, I'll double check everything on the Wiki before revising the Terms list for DxD.Sacred Gears are not magical artifacts. They are part of the system of miracles of the Biblical god.
Divine miracles and magic are different concepts. As are different concepts and many other supernatural phenomena.
Devils are not descendants of seventy-two pillars. Devils are literally a race of creatures created as a military force by the first Lucifer. Seventy-two pillars, these are the strongest representatives of all the devils created. There are many other details, but these are general indicators.
Very blocky. When you get the chance, create lines of space between paragraphs."It seems that this is the end of the world as humanity knows it."
A lone voice spoke out loud in the void that what had been known as the Shadowlands had become. A translucent figure, eyes unseeing but instead visioning as the whole of what was occurring in the world of living flashed before his sight. The trickster dead, laid low by reflections and nukes. The dragon, constrained yet further by the spider as she tightened her grip on him and his children. He gripped the top of the brick wall to his right tightly as image after image scrolled past the inside of his eyelids. The usurper traveling to the Beehive, as his far more awarded relatives kill and consume what the chaff of humanity. The light of the One, making his second debut amongst humanity to rally it's champions. The changers of reality, bound in war with the corRuptEd tOolMaKerS-
The spirit clawed at his ephemeral cheek to regain his focus, his eyes briefly opening to reveal the clouded surface of a blind man. "There's no time for falling back into the Madness… I must see what will happen, not what has already occured. I must!" The stare closed, as more scenes flowed by. Dracul taking control of humanity's form, Earthshaker failing to merge with her prey, the Shape- Sister, screaming in frustration as her plans for ascendancy crumble- A gasp issues from his mouth, the past and present finally transitioning to the future in his gaze. Dragon shakes off Spider, and humanity lives. "And Kindred die. I see."
Malakai, lost soul of the entity now known as Malkav, crumbled to the ground and onto the wall as exhaustion and the weight of the future fell upon his shoulders. A prophet, one who lost his sanity in life and unlife, yet only regained it once death had passed by. Even now, as the Seventh Great Maelstrom sought to destroy what was left of the Shadowlands, he merely sat there, and observed, as civilization crumbled under the force of gods and godlike beings. He sighed in his hopelessness, the scarred optimism dying off in his voice as he spoke, "At least humanity will still have a future… That's a far better result than most would have expected. It only took a reset to a time before the stone age, so I guess that's a decent price to pay for survival." His face contrasted the words he was speaking, a grimace formed on his visage, a once handsome face to contrast his sister's divine beauty now marred by self-inflicted scars and pulled out hair. And to think, such defects had been acquired in his time as a ghost alone, never mind the damage he had done to himself while he still possessed a body and its insanity. But, the time when good looks would have benefitted him had long past, and now he lay, a single soul in an empty city of shadows, relegated to the backwaters of history as the living world as he knew it died a sudden, but painful, death.
He started to chuckle as a darkly humorous thought crept into his mind. "It's funny… Arikel, I and everyone else thought it would be the One returning that would kill us and render the vampire extinct… but nope! It was all our own actions and nature itself that proved our undoing. Why else would things turn out this way? Sister, much as I loved her, was a stuck-up bitch who slept with more people than she had IQ points, Saulot only achieved inner peace after making a mess for everyone else to deal with, and yet every one of our cousins were worse!" He paused, then corrected his statement. "Well, Haqim was alright, so I guess he didn't deserve what he received. But one man out of 13 does not redeem the rest! It was hardly any wonder our Grandfather decided to lay his curses down upon us just as the One lay its upon him! He merely accelerated the process of our eventual self-destruction…" He trailed off, eyes opening once again to take in the realm around him… and to reminisce.
He was in the echo of some fallen city… which that was, he had no idea. It didn't matter anyway. Wherever he looked, despite the difference in architecture, all he could see in his mind was the long fallen City of Enoch. Oh, he wasn't enough of a fool to idealize the city itself, he was more than aware of the barbaric practices which occurred within its walls… yet, he still had some good memories of his time spent there with his sister and the others. Debating philosophy with Saulot, Set and Irad as the moon shone overhead; going hunting (for animals, not men) with Ennoia and Churka, gazing into the waters of prophecy with Zillah and the Eldest, watching in wonder as Arikel shaped the stone underneath her fingertips into monuments of sublimity… and growing crops with his grandfather. That was a joy from his past which he sorely missed, hearing Caine instruct him in how best to arrange the grape vines to produce the greatest tasting wine (how he knew which tasted best, while he was in his undead state, Malakai still didn't know and chalked up to his heightened senses), which places to plant the flowers so that they would receive the most of that sunlight which the Kindred were denied. Those few moments of happiness, rare as they were and rarer still as time went off, helped to color his life beyond the discordant state of his mind. It was sad, then, that their time in the First City (a mere three thousand years, at that) had been founded on unsteady ground, ready to collapse at the slightest provoca… tion…
Malakai blinked as a new sound, something that shouldn't be possible considering how all of the other ghosts in this place had been consumed by the Tempest even as more poured in, filtered into his ear. Granted, due to how powerful his hearing was, that sound came from dozens of miles away, and covered up by the roar of the tempest, but it was still noticeable… and coming closer. He closed his eyes as he willed his clairvoyance to orient itself towards the incoming object. What he saw was… unexpected, to say the least.
Coming down the translucent road which once connected this city of nonexistence to others, was a wheeled wagon which sputtered as puffs of smoke came out of the tail end. A car, he corrected himself, having seen such machines before in prior prophesying periods. It was painted and stylized entirely in black, but that wasn't what made it stand out (aside from its currently shifting position, of course). No, that would be the vibrancy of its appearance and form. "Normal" objects within the Shadowlands had a dull or translucent appearance, owing to their origin as mere memories of objects coming from the Skinlands or "Real World". That this particular vehicle was painted a bright green and looked as solid as any object on the other side of the veil was… strange, to say the least. As it crept along the street, his sight focused on the individual driving the car. As the image became clearer, his face morphed from an expression of surprise to one of utter shock.
"It can't be…" he muttered, "He's still alive? How? It's been millennia since…" he trailed off on his sentence even as he rose to his feet to try and move closer to the slowly encroaching object.
It took him longer than he would have liked to run towards the car, even in life he had never been as great of a master of the art of speed, as any of his siblings or cousins… or nieces or nephews and so on. Long story short, for one of his (former) kind, he was slow. His pace picked up to a sprint as he raced by building after dull grey building across the broken cobblestone streets. Eventually, after quite some time he finally was able to spot the vehicle with his natural senses, and in turn, it's occupant.
The man was, physically, of Arabic descent, with a pale hue to his bronze skin tone, and long coal black hair held together in a ponytail by tied twine. Atop his nose were a large pair of circular sunglasses, and on the bottom of his ears were a pair of gold earrings, the last remnants of his previous occupation he still kept. He wore for this occasion a red polo shirt and tan slacks, and Malakai had to admit it was odd seeing the man's upper body covered. After all, the last memory he possessed of him was the man only clothed by a simple white skirt (Weren't they called kilts in this day and age? Maybe his memory was failing him) girded up by, what else, a girdle, and wearing a golden medallion that signified his office and importance over all his subordinates.
Malakai tried to speak, to communicate his surprise at this sudden appearance, but no words came out. The man turned the key in his car, shutting it off, before stepping out the left side and falling without a hitch onto the dusty pavement. Looking up at the spirit, his face shifted to give a small smile as he opened his arms widely. Confused by the action, the Antediluvian could only stand still as the shorter man moved forward and hugged him.
"It is nice to see you in decent health, lord Malakai," remarked Jabal, the Ghoul of Caine.
The man in question could only look down, still in disbelief before finally able to put in the effort to respond. "Jabal… How… You're dead!"
The Ghoul blinked before pulling away from his embrace and looking the spirit in the eye… before chuckling. "Oh, no, sorry to worry you, my lord. Despite my appearance here in the Underworld, I in fact have yet to die, but I can see quite easily how you could make the connection."
Malakai shook his head. "No, I'm not talking about that, I'm talking about the Flood. How have you survived for so long, and through that disaster? When the 13 of us gathered once more after the waters receded, none of us were able to find you! We thought that you either drowned in the sanctified waters, or had been devoured by one of us for nourishment while we had been caught up in the rage of the Beast!"
Jabal blinked, before slowly shaking his head. "No, none of that occurred. When Lord Caine informed me as to what was occurring, as the rain fell down upon our heads, he created a chamber in the earth for me to rest in, alongside a stockade of his blood. He directed me that once the floodwaters had evaporated, I should still remain inside that chamber and only use my gifts to view things from a distance. I believe my Lord used his great power to hide away the evidence of the chamber's existence, so that it could never be found. By the time that you or any of Enoch's brood were of strong enough power to detect me, you had obviously put the idea of my survival out of your minds, and thus did not bother to look further. I had only left my hideaway after seeing Churka's demise in the Indus Valley, I couldn't bear to see any more of your siblings and cousins die by that point."
He snorted, as his voice took on a melancholic tone. "Of course, by then, it had been much too late. Only 5 years later, and all of you began to awaken and kill each other and your broods. It was only a couple of days ago that I finally received a new command from my Lord: to find you, and transport you to a new location. The first step of that mission was accomplished in just this moment."
Malakai furrowed his eyebrows as he looked around at his surroundings. "Jabal, we're in the Underworld, and I'm but a wraith. There IS no new location that I can go to, outside of Oblivion to be destroyed. Unless…" he trailed off as his eyes widened. His gaze fell back down upon the servant's head. "Are you taking me to see my Grandfather?" It was the only logical thing he could think of. Jabal, after all, was Caine's personal servant, and the only semi-mortal man outside of the Mages to have as much power as one of the other Flood Survivors.
Thus, it was to his surprise that Jabal actually shook his head in the negative. "Actually, no. Lord Caine is currently enjoying his last moments with a scholar of Ennoia's brood, back in the world of the living. Due to the specificity of God's curse upon him, he cannot escape into any other realm to avoid the planet's inevitable destruction of all things STATIC. After all, he was cursed to 'Wander the Earth,' and not 'Wander Mars.'" The ghoul gave a sharp laugh at that little joke. It wasn't really funny, to Malaki's senses at least. "No, there is another place where I am to take you, the last of the 3rd Generation. A… different place. Not a paradise, for most definitions of the word, but certainly not one where you need worry about the things that plagued you and your compatriots for millennia."
Malakai's former dumbfounded state returned with a vengeance. "Then where the hell is this place supposed to be? Are you suggesting that we go beyond the ninth planet into that realm of space where things man was never supposed to know or encounter thrive?"
The stare that Jabal gave back was a flat one. "My lord, your Grandfather is many things. Inadequate with regards to children or family, perhaps, but he's no fool. Not even you, back when you were still roaming the earth in your madness, were a fool, simply a troubled man. No, Lord Caine wants me to take you to a world, a new one. A new… Earth." The antediluvian was taken aback by this, so the servant rushed to explain. "Lord Caine felt that while he was justified in laying down those curses upon you and your descendants, he hadn't been a good parent to the 13 of you back in the days of the First City, which he believed is what lead to most of your degradations into insanity and megalomania. Present company excluded, of course. So, as recompense, he wanted to see what would happen when you were all granted a second chance at mortality. Obviously, with the world dying around us and the werecreatures battling it out, that's not possible here, but on another Earth, one not connected to this reality, the possibility lies there.
He tried utilizing his power to search for a world without God, whose influence he believed is what led to the rest of you falling into madness, present company not excluded this time. While I don't know the specifics of that endeavor, all I know is that while some were found, placing you and your siblings and cousins on those worlds would have been a disaster for a number of reasons. It wasn't until just before I ran into your Grandfather again that he had found a suitable place to live."
"And what world is that?" Malakai questioned, still in disbelief of all that he was being told. It wasn't every day, after all, that one was told about a new lease on life that wasn't some form of scam.
"I told you he tried looking for worlds without God," Jabal began, "what he found eventually was even better. A world where God was dead."
Silence invaded into that space, as the taller of the two men could not prevent his jaw from dropping. No words were spoken for many minutes, as he contemplated those preposterous words. "That… that's impossible, isn't it?" he finally managed to grit out.
"I thought so as well, at first, but Lord Caine assured me that it was the truth. Out there, in the multitude of universes, there is one where the Lord God once existed, but eventually ceased to be. A factor of damnation for the Angels, certainly, but for men like us? It is El Dorado and Zion mixed into one round whole."
"And Grandfather wants to simply, what, resurrect us? Reincarnate us? While the old world crumbles back into the primitive ages? Whatever did we do, that I did, that deserved such? Why should I have earned such a reward, when all I did was-" Malakai found his words cut off as Jabal's hand pincer-grabbed his cheeks to silence him. The other hand gripped his shoulder hard.
"Never say that," rebuked the servant harshly, his eyes piercing like arrows into Malakai's own. "Never say that you are deserving of nothing. It was no fault of your own that you were cursed with an illness of the mind from the One. Not a single bit of it. You, of all of your siblings and cousins, are the most innocent of your collective crimes. You wouldn't blame a child for doing a wrong they had no perception of, would you? So stop thinking the same for yourself!" The ghoul took a moment to calm down, before he continued on, his hand letting go of Malakai's face as he did so. "Originally, your Grandfather was only going have you, Haqim and perhaps Saulot reincarnated, because he felt that of the 13, you three were the most repentant and innocent. I think the events of the past two months, however, have changed his mind, and now in his compassion he wants to see if all 13… no, if all 16 of you can improve and become better people if given the opportunity."
The antediluvian blinked, as he tried counting up the third generation members that he knew of. "Absimilliard, Arikel, Cappadocius, Churka, Ennoia, the Giovanni head, Haqim, myself, Saulot, Sutekh, the Usurper, the Eldest, Troile, and Ventru… that's 14," he muttered out aloud.
"You're forgetting Ilyes and Laza," Jabal smugly countered. The look on his lord's face as he realized what that statement meant was far too enjoyable to see. Eventually that expression morphed into a deadpan face, one primed for snark.
"…If I ask how was that even possible, you're going to have an explanation ready, aren't you?"
"Correct," the servant confirmed.
"…I'm just going to assume you're right and move on."
The ghoul chuckled at that statement, it seemed his Lord's quota for big surprises today had been exceeded. "Very well then, Lord Malakai. Hop on into the right seat of the car, I'll start it up." The spirit did so as Jabal moved to the front of the car and rotated the lever on the front in one smooth circle, starting the engine back up. As the vehicle sputtered to life, he hopped back into the driver's seat and pulled a lever on the left, a shudder passing through the carriage, before he stomped onto one of the pedals and made the car move.
Malakai inspected the vehicle once the two of them were in motion. "How did you even come to acquire a vehicle such as this? It's not the ghost of a car, I can tell that much, so how did you even get it here?"
Jabal laughed, obviously this was a story of his that he liked to tell. "Shortly after I had left my hideaway, I came across an upstart Euthanatoi who was convinced that I was a 'source of evil in the world that needed to be purged.' Said that straight to my face, even. So, since he decided that the world needed to be rid of me, I figured that he needed to be rid of his Model T. He's not dead, he only suffered a few broken bones, and I believed this ride would help me in my journeys around the Earth. As providence would have it, he had enchanted the damn thing to be able to go into the Underworld, and considering my current mission, I'm certainly not complaining."
He continued laughing as they rode along, though Malakai couldn't help but ask: "What is a Euthanatoi?"
The servant waved him off. "Just a wizard serial killer, no need to worry about it."
That wasn't exactly reassuring.
Malakai felt the change when it happened. Suddenly, what seemed like a dismal reality quickly transitioned into a strange realm of forests and wildlife. Oddly, he felt something that had been tugging on his soul… snap. Whatever it had been, it had lead back into the Underworld, which they had presumably left.
"We've left the Underworld, and are now in what some call the 'Middle Umbra.' At least, I think they do, I have little experience with the Spirit Realms. In any case, there is a mage outpost near here that had been abandoned in the current events. Normally, we'd be barred from entry, but thankfully the facility runs on passwords, and not some form of scanning for reasons I know not. Probably just laziness of some sort, now that I think about it. Regardless, the reason we are headed there is so that I can undo the damage that's been done to your soul thanks to your time spent in the Underworld."
The spirit sharply turned his head towards the ghoul. "How are we supposed to do that? Not even Grandfather or Saulot had the ability to heal a soul as old as myself from the wounds of Entropy."
"Correct," agreed Jabal. "Even the healer's art can only resurrect the recently deceased. However, in the facility there is a device that can reverse the damage done to a soul, thus transforming you into an honorary member of the 'recently deceased.' From there, I simply have to take your spirit to the Material World, and Lord Caine can incarnate and transport you to the other world in a new body."
"So we are going to see my Grandfather, then?" questioned Malakai.
Jabal took one hand off of the steering wheel to shake it in a "so-so" manner. "Yes and no. How the device works is that it places you into a vessel for containment once it is finished healing the damage you sustained, presumably for your safety. You likely won't even see your Grandfather's face when he transports your soul, as we'll end up thousands of miles away from where he is on Earth. The only reason he can even pull off a feat like this from that distance is-"
"Because he's Grandfather, and he can do things like that," interrupted the grandson.
The servant nodded. "Correct. For all his limitations, Lord Caine's power is still astonishing. I still haven't figured out how exactly he created that sundial of his, and it's been millennia since the First City was still around!"
Malakai frowned in thought as they passed through a steel gate which interrupted the endless wild. "I think Haqim eventually figured it out, but I don't remember if that's true or not." He paused in his recollection as a large grey building suddenly appeared before them. "JABAL-"
The ghoul was already pushing on the brakes as the tires of the vehicles screeched to a halt, eventually stopping an inch before the duo would have crashed into stone wall. Pulling on the parking brake, Jabal turned off the car, a happy expression on his face. "I think I'm really getting the handle of this 'driving' thing! Wonderful!" Malakai was gobsmacked at the man's cheerfulness despite them almost having a collision. Not that it would have hurt them, per se, as they were both of supernatural durability, but the car was presumably of less formidable make. He shook his head in disbelief, muttering as he followed the servant around the facility.
"I think his 'gift' for horses is translating to his 'skill' at driving."
In short, he had no talent whatsoever.
To a man who had mainly lived in the days of man where food was more important than money and nakedness the fashion standard of the millennia, a facility such as this was quite astonishing to walk through. Devices and gadgets he could not name (and that was after having experienced much of the past centuries through his clairvoyance!) mixed in with simple tools like hammers and levers, albeit scaled up to size and filled with more parts than he had ephemeral teeth. They had entered through a small door in a covert corner of the facility, wherein Jabal had pulled out a small piece of green paper ("a post-it note," his mind told him, though how he knew that he did not know), read off of it, and pushed several times into a form of tablet fused into the wall. A chime had been heard, and the door, had opened. This lead them inside to their current location.
There was a map of sorts posted onto one of the walls of the building, which Jabal was looking at while reading more details off of the note. "Floor 3, Room 7b… Ah, here it is!" Obviously, he had found where they were supposed to go. The servant went over to a door marked with the sign "Stairwell" and went through, with Malakai following behind him. Their increased speed did them a favor as they glided up the stairwell, at the rate they were headed, an elevator or something of that nature would have been too slow. They reached the third floor, passing through the stairwell doors, and the ghoul motioned his lord to the direction they needed to head towards. This took them to a double door constructed out of some flimsy metal.
He knew it was flimsy, because rather than inputting a password, Jabal simply punched a hole through the doors. Did he really only know the building's password, and not the one for the room they needed to go to? Regardless, the doors, or anything really, were of no match to a man with such mastery over the art of strength. The two of them ducked their heads through the gaping opening, and turned around to look at the device they had been searching for.
The first aspect of the machine that caught his attention was the wide glass cylinder which extended nearly to the ceiling. Inside and past the glass door lay a chair covered in straps and restraints (undoubtedly for some unruly test subjects) fused to a metal bottom. The cylinder connected itself via tubing to another device that to Malakai simply looked like a large box. Masses of wires connected the box to various outlets in the wall. Overall, all he could tell about the device was where he needed to sit.
He looked towards Jabal. "And you know how this device is supposed to operate?"
The servant shrugged and waved the post-it note. "I do now." Sharpening his senses Malakai saw the handwriting written on the note, and while he couldn't read what it actually said for some odd reason (Was it enchanted to hide the message away from all but Jabal's eyes?) he could at least tell that it was his Grandfather's handwriting, even if it was his first time seeing such for any written language other than Enochian. Whatever doubts he may have had regarding Jabal's intentions, which, of course, there were none, they had immediately eased away.
The man in question waved his lord over to the chair. "Now, I need to strap you into this chair before I turn on the device. Unfortunately, as much as I would like to say otherwise, the process is likely going to hurt. We are, after all, reconstructing your soul, and the best healing always has to cut inside just a little to solve the problem."
This gave the mad scientist wannabe a perplexed look. "I may be a wraith at this current moment in time, but could I not still just use my abilities to dull the pain?"
Jabal shook his head, a small grimace appearing on his face. "Unfortunately, in order for this to work, I can't have you making any expenditures of your spiritual energy. It's going to throw the machine off, and put us back at square one. Or, at least, I believe it will. Better to just be safe and not do anything that could possibly halt the process, right?"
There was some hesitation on Malakai's part, but eventually he nodded his head in agreement. "Right." He moved into the cylinder and sat down in the chair, trying to remain visibly calm as Jabal moved to strap him down with the restraints. It was actually fairly difficult, he had rarely been tied down like this before, in his worst moments of insanity, so not only did it provoke an instinctive fear of his, claustrophobia, it also reminded him of some bad memories. Not a winning combination to be feeling at the moment.
Finally, all of the restraints were in place. Jabal moved back to leave the cylinder and close the door, but before he did so, he leaned his head back into the chamber, a sad smile on his face. "You're going to be just fine. Your Grandfather was rarely ever wrong in his predictions, just like you, and since he's sure that everything is going to be alright, I think you should trust in his faith." The servant nodded his head, reminiscing about some memory Malakai knew not. He straightened up, his hand on the handle of the chamber, and said, "Before we begin, your Grandfather instructed me to say a few words to you." Jabal removed his sunglasses so that he could stare right into Malakai's eyes, as he did so, his face slackened for a brief second, before morphing into a mixed expression of sorrow and love. His mouth emitted but a few short phrases in a language Malakai hadn't heard in over seven thousand years.
"I love you, Malakai, my grandson, and I'm sorry. I'm sorry for being such a terrible parent, to you and all of your siblings and cousins. And I'm sorry, but this… will be our last goodbye."
The grandchild could not help but widen his eyes, he knew exactly what a possession looked like. "Grandfather?" he replied back in that same tongue. The man currently moving Jabal's body nodded his head, a greater smile than before on his visage, as he looked away, and closed the door. Grandfather… Perhaps he should be asking why Grandfather could not just immediately transport him once his soul had been restored instead of having to wait until he was back in the Material World, since he could obviously still possess his servant without issue, but Malakai didn't truly care about that. He got to see Grandfather, albeit in someone else's body, and maybe that was good enough for him.
Switches were flipped, he could hear them. Buzzing noises started to emerge from the top of the cylinder. Those noises grew and evolved into a cacophony which drilled through his ears. The pain of such eventually moved into his skull, and Malakai's World was Pain.
…And then, it was darkness.
A/N: Apologies for the lack of DxD stuff just yet, this is a send-off to the World of Darkness in effect, as such, we'll be focusing heavily on the DxD side more with chapter 1.
Thank you, I should have noticed that the formatting got messed up when I pasted the chapter from the Word doc.Very blocky. When you get the chance, create lines of space between paragraphs.